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  • Home > Jack O’Brien

    World Premiere of Great Scott!

    BY JAKE HEGGIE AND TERRENCE McNALLY

    CO-COMMISSIONED AND CO-PRODUCED WITH SAN DIEGO OPERA

    STARRING JOYCE DIDONATO AS ARDEN SCOTT

     

    Presenting Sponsor Eugene McDermott Foundation

     

    OPENING NIGHT: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2015 AT 8:00 PM

    THE LINDA AND MITCH HART SEASON

    OPENING NIGHT PERFORMANCE,

    THE MARGOT AND BILL WINSPEAR OPERA HOUSE

    AT THE AT&T PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, DALLAS

     

    With Additional Support from Hoblitzelle Foundation,

    Diane B. Wilsey, Carol Franc Buck Foundation,

    National Endowment for the Arts and

    The Opera Fund, a program of OPERA America

     

    Joyce DiDonato is the Marnie and Kern Wildenthal Principal Artist

                DALLAS, OCTOBER 2, 2015 – The Dallas Opera is proud to present one of the most eagerly anticipated new operas of the year: Jake Heggie and Terrence McNally’s GREAT SCOTT, featuring a once-in-a-lifetime cast headed by America’s favorite mezzo-soprano, Joyce DiDonato, in the title role of Arden Scott; also starring soprano Ailyn Pérez, mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade, baritone Nathan Gunn, countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo, bass Kevin Burdette, tenor Rodell Rosel and baritone Michael Mayes.

                GREAT SCOTT, (Presenting Sponsor, Eugene McDermott Foundation) a co-commission/co-production of TDO and San Diego Opera, officially opens The Dallas Opera’s 2015-2016 Season, “Seeking the Human Element,” on the evening of Friday, October 30, 2015 at 8:00 p.m. (please note the later curtain time) in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in Dallas, Texas.

                The Linda and Mitch Hart Season Opening Night Performance will be followed by four additional performances on November 1(m), 4, 7 & 15(m), 2015.

                In addition to acclaimed American composer Jake Heggie and award-winning librettist Terrence McNally—who conceived the original story—Great Scott features a phenomenal production and artistic team.              In his first TDO appearance since Moby-Dick, the distinguished Patrick Summers will conduct the world premiere, Broadway legend and Tony Award-winner Jack O’Brien is staging the production, and Tony and Olivier Award-winner Bob Crowley (An American in Paris, Skylight, Once) has designed both sets and costumes for Great Scott in his Dallas Opera debut. 

                Other key contributors include Associate Conductor Nicole Paiement (Everest), Lighting Designer Brian MacDevitt (another multiple Tony winner!—most recently for The Book of Mormon) and renowned Projections Designer Elaine J. McCarthy (Moby-Dick, Everest, Iolanta).

                “It’s a homecoming for Terrence and a creative homecoming for me,” writes Great Scott composer Jake Heggie.  It’s also a homecoming for our brilliant director, Jack O’Brien, who made his Dallas Opera directorial debut in 1972, and has since created dozens of iconic Broadway shows, including Hairspray and The Full Monty.”

                This timely and poignant full-length opera marks Mr. Heggie and Mr. McNally’s first major collaboration since Dead Man Walking (2000), which was hailed as a “masterpiece” by the San Francisco Chronicle.  One of theater’s most prominent playwrights, Mr. McNally has been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for Drama and has won multiple Tony and Drama Desk Awards, as well as an Emmy Award.

                Mr. Heggie’s 2010 collaboration with librettist Gene Scheer: Moby-Dick, now considered a modern-day masterpiece, premiered at The Dallas Opera and has since gone on to earn critical acclaim in sold-out performances from Canada to Australia.

                This star-studded 2015 Dallas Opera world premiere is generously supported by Hoblitzelle Foundation, Diane B. Wilsey, Carol Franc Buck Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts and The Opera Fund, a program of OPERA America. 

                Miss Joyce DiDonato is the Marnie and Kern Wildenthal Principal Artist.

                “Having seen, first hand, the tremendous success of Moby-Dick in Dallas back in 2010, I was determined to give Jake a second opportunity to compose a major new work for The Dallas Opera,” explains Dallas Opera General Director and CEO Keith Cerny.  “With the support of TDO’s Executive Committee, I commissioned Jake to begin planning his next opera over four years ago, in the summer of 2011, and we were later joined by San Diego Opera.

                “All of us are absolutely thrilled to have begun rehearsals for this outstanding new work, featuring as it does the exceptional writing talents of Terrence McNally, a once-in-a-lifetime cast and an artistic ‘dream team.’ 

                “Critical anticipation and audience enthusiasm has been tremendous—even in advance of the premiere—and we are all looking forward to bringing this brilliant new work to the public on October 30th.”

    ~~~~

                In McNally’s original story and libretto, international opera star Arden Scott returns to her hometown to try to save the struggling opera company that launched her to fame and fortune. However, as American Opera prepares for the world premiere of Rosa Dolorosa, figlia di Pompei (“Rosa Dolorosa, Daughter of Pompeii”) – the nearly 200-year old bel canto opera Arden recently discovered – she faces unexpected competition from an ambitious young soprano as well as community excitement surrounding the local professional football team’s first Super Bowl (Go Grizzlies!).  The fate of the opera company hangs in the balance as Arden is forced to consider the personal sacrifices she has made for her career, and comes to understand that true greatness is a matter of heart.

                “I’m a playwright because of opera,” says Great Scott librettist Terrence McNally, who was awarded the Dramatists Guild Lifetime Achievement Award in 2011, “so it was inevitable that I would say ‘yes’ when Jake Heggie asked me to write an opera with him.  That was Dead Man Walking.

                “Fifteen years later we’re in Dallas for the world premiere of our second collaboration, Great Scott, in the city where my passion for this impossible art form was ignited some 65 years ago.”

                “Filled with surprising characters, plot twists and turns,” writes Mr. Heggie, “Great Scott unfolds as deeply touching, human and completely hilarious.”

    ~~~~

              Composer Jake Heggie has written more than 250 songs, as well as chamber, choral and orchestral works.  His operas: Moby-Dick, Dead Man Walking, Out of Darkness, Three Decembers, To Hell and Back, The End of the Affair, and The Radio Hour—most, in collaboration with writers Terrence McNally and Gene Scheer, have been produced to great acclaim on five continents. Following Great Scott, his next major project is an opera based on Frank Capra’s 1946 film classic, “It’s a Wonderful Life,” for Houston Grand Opera.

               Inducted into The Theater Hall of Fame in 1996, librettist Terrence McNally, “a probing and enduring dramatist” (The New York Times), has had a significant impact on American Theater through such Tony Award-winning works as Love! Valour! Compassion! and Master Class, as well as his books for Ragtime and Kiss of the Spider Woman.  Other works include Frankie and Johnny in the Clair de Lune; Lips Together, Teeth Apart; The Lisbon Traviata; It’s Only a Play; Corpus Christi and The Ritz.  McNally’s Mothers and Sons premiered on Broadway in 2014.

               Houston Grand Opera Artistic and Music Director and Principal Guest Conductor for San Francisco Opera, Patrick Summers commands a vast repertory.  Mr. Summers has led an array of productions at the Metropolitan Opera, including Madama Butterfly, Salome, and I Puritani, which were broadcast live in HD to movie theaters globally.  He has also conducted at the world’s preeminent opera companies, including Barcelona’s Gran Teatre Del Liceu, Lisbon Opera, Bordeaux Opera, Deutsche Oper Berlin, the Bregenz Festival, Welsh National Opera, Opera Australia, Seattle Opera, and Los Angeles Opera, as well as The Dallas Opera. 

               Maestro Summers is a constant collaborator with Jake Heggie. Together, they have premiered such works as Dead Man Walking, Three Decembers, Moby-Dick and, now, Great Scott.

               Director Jack O’Brien’s contributions to the Broadway stage include It’s Only a Play, Macbeth, The Nance, Dead Accounts, Catch Me If You Can, Impressionism, The Coast of Utopia, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, Henry IV, The Invention of Love and many more.  Mr. O’Brien has successfully staged Il trittico at the Metropolitan Opera, Guys and Dolls at Carnegie Hall, and Much Ado About Nothing in New York’s Central Park.  The longtime Artistic Director of the Old Globe Theatre has also directed half-a-dozen movies for “American Playhouse” on PBS.

                Grammy Award-winning superstar mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato, prompted Michael Church of The Guardian (U.K.) to write, “No other singer could match what this blonde bombshell from Kansas does, marrying coloratura with the serene liquidity of birdsong to an expressiveness of heart-stopping beauty.” She leads a brilliant all-star cast that includes in-demand soprano Ailyn Pérez (winner of the 2012 Richard Tucker Award), praised by the San Diego News Network for her “big, powerful, beautiful, lyrical and endlessly supple voice,” as Tatyana Bakst, a fiercely ambitious young singer from Eastern Europe, eager to assume the mantle of stardom—as quickly as possible. 

                Great Scott also stars the legendary Frederica von Stade as Mrs. Edward “Winnie” Flato, the founder and chief benefactor of the American Opera Company, who also happens to be married to the owner of the Super Bowl-bound local football team. Joshua Kosman of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote: “Even if she were not one of the great singers of our day, mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade could probably draw a full house…eager just to be in her presence and watch her be herself.  She’s that enchanting.” 

                In the role of architect Sid Taylor, the man from Arden Scott’s past who might not be content to remain there, is opera heart-throb Nathan Gunn, “a vivid, appealing stage presence, with that gorgeous, well-focused baritone” (Scott Cantrell, The Dallas Morning News); a singer who most recently dazzled Dallas Opera audiences as clever Figaro in The Barber of Seville and as the mysterious Lodger in TDO’s highly praised 2013 revival of Dominick Argento’s The Aspern Papers.  More recently, Gunn attracted glowing reviews as Inman in the Santa Fe Opera world premiere of Jennifer Higdon and Gene Scheer’s Cold Mountain.

                Sid’s eleven-year-old son, Tommy Taylor (a speaking role), will be played by Mark Hancock in his company debut.

                Rounding out the GREAT SCOTT cast is counter-tenor Anthony Roth Costanzo in his Dallas Opera debut as a no-nonsense stage manager and longtime friend of Arden Scott.  Mr. Costanzo possesses, “the kind of high-voltage, high-register male singing that comes once in a generation” (Ken Smith, Musical America).  

                Versatile bass Kevin Burdette (Beck Weathers in Everest), known for his “large powerful voice with a burnished robust sound” and “a vibrant personality” (Opera Today) performs the dual roles of conductor Eric Gold and The Ghost of Vittorio Bazzetti, the composer of Rosa Dolorosa, the long-lost, never-performed bel canto opera being championed by Arden.

                Rodell Rosel, a tenor, creates the role of Anthony Candolino, while baritone Michael Mayes sings the role of Wendell Swann, both in their company debuts.

                The Dallas Opera Chorus will be prepared by Chorus Master Alexander Rom.  Wigs and make-up designed by David Zimmerman.  The Assistant Conductor is Keith Chambers.  J. Knighten Smit serves as Assistant Director; Hally Albers is the Stage Manager. 

                Choreography by John de los Santos.  Musical preparation by Robert Mollicone and Kirk Severtson.  Italian Language Consultant, Valentina Simi.

                All performances will take place in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House, selected by Southern Living magazine as the best new venue for opera.

                A free, pre-performance lecture (The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talks) will be conducted one hour prior to curtain at most performances.  The Dallas Opera Guild also hosts “Opera Insights,” a lively panel discussion featuring artists, directors and designers, on the Sunday afternoon prior to opening.  For more details, visit dallasopera.org.

                Single tickets, starting at just $19, are subject to availability.  Tickets may be purchased at the door – throughout the 2015-2016 Season – or in advance by calling 214.443.1000.  Subscriptions and single tickets are also available for purchase online throughout the season at www.dallasopera.org.

                Other than on FIRST NIGHT, the curtain for evening performances is at 7:30, except where noted; matinees begin Sunday afternoons at 2:00 p.m.

                The Margot and Bill Winspear Opera house is located in the heart of the Dallas Arts District at 2403 Flora St., Dallas TX 75201. 

     

                For more information, consult the friendly staff in the Dallas Opera Ticket Services Office at 214-443-1000 or visit us online at www.dallasopera.org.     

    ~~~~

    EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE

    Additional Information about The Dallas Opera is Available Online at www.dallasopera.org

     

    FOR HIGH-RESOLUTION PHOTOGRAPHS

    Contact Suzanne Calvin, Director of Media and PR at suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org

    Or Celeste Hart, Communications Manager at celeste.hart@dallasopera.org

    ~~~~

    TEXAS INSTRUMENTS, 2015-2016 SEASON SPONSOR FOR THE DALLAS OPERA’S “SEEKING THE HUMAN ELEMENT” SEASON

     

    The Dallas Opera Family Performances are generously supported by

    Texas Instruments and the Betty and Steve Suellentrop

    Educational Outreach Fund.

    TDO Family Performances are a part of the

    Perot Foundation Education and Community Outreach Programs

     

    Ticket Information for the 2015-2016 Dallas Opera Season

    All performances are in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center unless otherwise indicated.  Single Tickets range from $19 to $275.  Full Subscriptions start at $99, Flex Subscriptions (three-performances of your choice) begin at $75.  Family performance tickets are just $5.  For more information or to make your purchase, contact The Dallas Opera Ticket Services Office at 214.443.1000 or visit us online at dallasopera.org

    Single Tickets On Sale for 2015-2016 Season!

    Show Boat-Robert Kusel (LOChicago)

    Photo by Robert Kusel for Lyric Opera of Chicago

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
    Monday, July 13, 2015
    Contact: Suzanne Calvin 214.443.1014 Or Celeste Hart 214.443.1071
    suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org celeste.hart@dallasopera.org

    THE DALLAS OPERA IS THRILLED
    TO ANNOUNCE
    SINGLE TICKETS
    FOR THE 2015-2016 SEASON
    “SEEKING THE
    HUMAN ELEMENT”
    ~~~~
    PRESENTED BY TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
    ~~~~
    GO ON SALE WEDNESDAY, JULY 15TH
    Single tickets Start at Just $19
    ~~~~
    Family Performance Singles – $5 apiece!

    DALLAS, JULY 13, 2015 – Single tickets for The Dallas Opera’s magnificent 2015-2016 “Seeking the Human Element” Season, and popular TDO Family Performances will go on sale to the general public Wednesday, July 15, 2015 at 10:00 a.m. The season, which includes five spectacular operas including two highly-anticipated world premieres, is presented by Texas Instruments. Mainstage performances take place in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center, 2403 Flora Street, in the Dallas Arts District.
    Often considered the ultimate art form, opera combines fabulous singing and acting, innovative sets and costumes, a full orchestra and chorus and the greatest stories and music of all time.
    An incredible value, single tickets start at the low price of $19 and may be purchased, 24/7, at www.dallasopera.org or by calling our friendly TDO ticket office professionals at
    214-443-1000—beginning July 15th.
    Enjoy excellent savings and wonderful subscriber benefits by purchasing a Full Season or Flex subscription available now. Full subscriptions (five productions) begin at the incredibly low price of just $95; Flex subscriptions (three productions) start at just $75. Four opera packages are also available upon request. Benefits include ticket exchange privileges, promotions, optimal seat selection, payment plans, invitations to exclusive events, discounted parking and free ticket replacement.
    Here are some highlights of the upcoming Dallas Opera season:

    • GREAT SCOTT is a world premiere featuring a stellar cast of internationally renowned performers and a production “dream team” led by composer Jake Heggie, librettist Terrence McNally, conductor Patrick Summers and stage director Jack O’Brien. Superstar mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato leads the cast in the title role of Arden Scott. Also starring soprano Ailyn Pérez, the legendary Frederica von Stade, and magnetic baritone Nathan Gunn. (Oct. 30 The Linda and Mitch Hart Season Opening Night Performance, Nov. 1(m), 4, 7 & 15(m), 2015)
    • TOSCA, the classic, passionate Italian opera set in Rome centers around the character Floria Tosca, an opera diva (soprano Emily Magee). Giacomo Puccini’s tale of love, lust, political intrigue and abuse of power also stars Chilean tenor Giancarlo Monsalve as Cavaradossi, the artist who loves her. (Nov. 6, 8(m), 11, 14, 20 & 22(m), 2015)
    • BECOMING SANTA CLAUS, a warm-hearted world premiere, likely to become a new holiday tradition, is by American composer Mark Adamo. The family-friendly opera stars mezzo-soprano Jennifer Rivera as Queen Sophine and features charismatic young tenor Juan José de León in the role of Prince Claus. (Dec. 4, 6(m), 9 & 12, 2015)
    • MANON is a French opera by Jules Massenet about a naive young lady who learns that true love and romantic dalliances don’t necessarily bring happiness. The alluring and versatile lovely soprano Ailyn Pérez stars in the title role. (Mar. 4, 6(m), 9 & 12, 2016)
    • SHOW BOAT features some of musical theater’s greatest hits including the show-stopping “Ol’ Man River” and “Make Believe.” The 20th century masterpiece by Jerome Kern and Oscar Hammerstein II will be enriched with the power of the operatic voice. (Apr. 15, 17(m), 20, 23, 29 & May 1, 2016)

    “Our goal is to present a wide range of productions providing an inspiring artistic and entertainment experience,” explains Dallas Opera General Director and CEO Keith Cerny. “We commissioned two premieres by some of the best composers and librettists of today to continue to add outstanding works to the operatic canon. Complementing these premieres are two classics of the repertoire, and TDO’s first-ever great American Musical. Newcomers to opera are invited to be thrilled by this uniquely diverse art form, and aficionados will continue to experience world-class opera performed by extraordinary talent.”

    Starting the season off on a high note, The Dallas Opera presents the world premiere of Great Scott by acclaimed composer Jake Heggie (Moby-Dick) and Terrence McNally, an award-winning playwright. In Mr. McNally’s original story and libretto, international opera star Arden Scott (Joyce DiDonato, The Marnie and Kern Wildenthal Princpal Artist) returns to her hometown to try to save the struggling opera company that launched her to fame and fortune. She faces unexpected competition from an ambitious young soprano (Ailyn Pérez) as well as community excitement surrounding the local pro-football team’s first national championship game (Go Grizzlies!). Great Scott is made possible through support from Presenting Sponsor, The Eugene McDermott Foundation, and additional support from Hoblitzelle Foundation, Carol Franc Buck Foundation, The National Endowment for the Arts and the Opera Fund, a program of OPERA America.
    Next, TDO will present Tosca, a beloved, beautiful yet riveting traditional production by Puccini. Audience members will be on the edge of their seats as Tosca (Emily Magee) fends off the evil and pathological Baron Scarpia (portrayed by Raymond Aceto) in an effort to save her lover’s life. This captivating opera will be conducted by internationally renowned Dallas Opera Music Director Emmanuel Villaume of whom the Financial Times wrote he “reinforced a delicate balance between lyrical restraint and dramatic exuberance.”
    The third production is the world premiere of the whimsical-yet-poignant holiday opera Becoming Santa Claus by renowned American composer and librettist Mark Adamo. With a magical set and costumes, glorious music, the power and beauty of operatic voices as well as some delightful surprises, this new production will inspire everyone in the family! The opera stars exceptional performers Jennifer Rivera as Queen Sophine, Juan José de León as Prince Claus and Matt Boehler in his company debut as Donkey. This world premiere production is made possible through generous underwriting support from Dr. and Mrs. Tom Mayer and Maile and Charles Shea.
    TDO’s fourth production, the much-loved Manon, is the compelling story of a beautiful young woman (acclaimed soprano Ailyn Pérez) whose character transforms from an innocent, to a seductress, to a woman mired in shame. Tenor Stephen Costello (Moby-Dick) stars as Chevalier des Grieux, the man who truly loves Manon and hopes to save her from exile. Dallas Opera Music Director Emeritus Graeme Jenkins returns to conduct The Dallas Opera Orchestra in what many consider to be Massenet’s greatest work!

    The season finale is Show Boat, which tells the story of a young couple, Magnolia Hawks (radiant soprano Andriana Chuchman) and the irresistible Gaylord Ravenal, a riverboat gambler (baritone Michael Todd Simpson), who fall madly in love. They begin performing together on her parent’s show boat, “The Cotton Blossom.” But after her mother disapproves of their marriage, their performing career ends, Ravenal starts gambling again and their love hits choppy waters. The musical also addresses issues of racism and addiction. The brilliant production created by Francesca Zambello, will be conducted by TDO Music Director Emmanuel Villaume.

    “Our single tickets present a fantastic opportunity to see some of the best entertainment available in North Texas and are a great option for those that desire more flexibility! We welcome your calls and clicks starting on July 15 to help ensure your favorite seats are available,” adds Dallas Opera Marketing Director Carrie Ellen Adamian. “Subscriptions are also an extremely attractive option for ticket buyers and offer multiple benefits like discounts, tickets exchanges and payment plans.”

    Guest stars making highly anticipated Dallas Opera debuts this season include:

    • Joyce DiDonato, soprano, making her TDO debut as Arden Scott in Great Scott, is an internationally renowned performer. “…even Carnegie Hall didn’t seem large enough to contain her voice and expressive presence…Every mood and dynamic seems addressed directly to the listener with no dramatic barrier,” raved George Grella, New York Classical Review.
    • Giancarlo Monsalve, tenor, will portray the role of Mario Cavaradossi, Tosca’s lover. “The climax of the evening was a young Chilean tenor…Nearly six feet high, with an athletic physique and a spectacular sensual look, Monsalve is nothing but a typical tenor.” Cyril Veselago Becenaro, Opera News
    • Jennifer Rivera: According to the New York Times “Jennifer sang…with a luminous mezzo-soprano and reacted keenly to the opera’s swiftly changing moods.” She will create the role of Queen Sophine in Becoming Santa Claus in her TDO debut.
    • Matt Boehler, bass, has been hailed by the New York Times as “a bass with an attitude and the goods to back it up.” Making his TDO debut, he will create the roles of Donkey and Messenger in Becoming Santa Claus.
    • Edwin Crossley-Mercer, baritone, stars as Lescaut in Manon in his TDO debut. “Edwin Crossley-Mercer makes us appreciate the great French baritone tradition again with its original singing, precise expression and simple vocal beauty.” Concert Classique
    • David Pittsinger makes his TDO debut as Le Comte in Manon. “His brilliant, knife-clean bass-baritone voice, impeccable enunciation-even with a French accent-and his authoritative, passionate delivery provide the perfect mix of romance, passion, and traditional masculine bravado.” The Washington Times
    • Andrianna Chuchman, soprano, has been praised by The Chicago Tribune for radiating “enough vocal allure, physical beauty and charm to light up the stage,” in her starring role of Magnolia Hawks in Show Boat.
    • Alyson Cambridge: Opera News raved “Alyson Cambridge’s sparkling soprano was matched by her confident, thoroughly believable characterization.” The soprano makes her TDO debut as Julie in Show Boat.

    Returning to the Dallas Opera stage this season are many highly regarded artists:

    • Frederica von Stade: Adding to the stellar cast of Great Scott, the mezzo-soprano will portray the character of Mrs. Edward “Winnie” Flato. New York Newsday has raved, “Her singing was polished yet warm, like china under whose thin glase are painted scenes of extraordinary delicacy…It was something close to ecstasy.”
    • Nathan Gunn, stars as the love interest Sid Taylor in Great Scott. “Gunn tailors his impressive baritone arsenal of robust legato climaxes, snarly macho lower notes and beautiful floating upper tones…” Opera News
    • Ailyn Pérez: The highly sought-after soprano stars as Tatyana Bakst in Great Scott and the title role of Manon. “…the bewitching young American soprano puts her heart into every twist of the drama…her performance was glorious, the quiet passages magical.” The Observer (UK)
    • Emily Magee, soprano stars as the Floria Tosca. She is described by Robert Levine of Classics Today as “a super Tosca, singing with clarity and grand tone, delivering outrage and tenderness in equal proportions. Her ‘Vissi d’arte’ is gorgeous.”
    • Stephen Costello, tenor, stars as des Grieux in Manon, has been described by Opera News as “A first-class talent…An intelligent, well trained singer whose enormous talent and natural musical instincts mark him for potential greatness.”
    • Kevin Burdette, bass, will create the role of Eric Gold in Great Scott. According to a review from the San Francisco Chronicle “…his performance was a tour de force of vocal splendor and comic timing.”
    • Raymond Aceto garnered high praise from Opera News for his portrayal of the Baron Scarpia in Tosca. “Raymond Aceto’s powerful, pathologically evil baron could have carried the night on his own. The varying colors of Aceto’s bass and the nuances of his acting brought realism and depth to the character—predatory, slithering, manipulative in Act I; cruel, taunting and wolfishly greedy in Act II.”

    The Dallas Opera Family Performances are generously supported by Texas Instruments
    and the Betty and Steve Suellentrop Educational Outreach Fund. TDO Family Performances are a part of the Perot Foundation Education and Community Outreach Programs.
    In addition to the July 26, 2015 performance of The Billy Goats Gruff at Dallas Children’s Theater, $5 single tickets are on sale now at 214-443-1000 for these upcoming, eagerly anticipated TDO Family Performances:
    • Mozart’s Bastien and Bastienne, a little romance with The Dallas Opera Orchestra conducted by Paolo Bressan: Winspear Opera House, 2:00 p.m. December 5, 2015 and March 5, 2016.
    • Rossini and Company, the composer’s greatest hits performed by The Dallas Opera Orchestra and guest artists: Winspear Opera House, 2:00 p.m. curtain on November 21, 2015 under the baton of guest conductor Peter Manning and March 13, 2016, under the baton of guest conductor Paolo Bressan.
    • The Billy Goats Gruff featuring outstanding young artists and The Dallas Opera Orchestra led by guest conductor Peter Manning: Winspear Opera House, 2:00 p.m., April 16, 2016.

    The Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House is conveniently located in the heart of the Arts District at 2403 Flora Street, Dallas, TX 75201.

    ~~~~

    EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS SUBJECT TO CHANGE

    ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ABOUT “JULY AT THE DALLAS OPERA”
    IS CONVENIENTLY AVAILABLE ONLINE, 24/7
    VISIT WWW.DALLASOPERA.ORG AND CHECK THE CALENDAR LISTINGS

    TEXAS INSTRUMENTS, 2015-2016 SEASON SPONSOR FOR THE DALLAS OPERA’S “SEEKING THE HUMAN ELEMENT” SEASON

    Ticket Information for the 2015-2016 Dallas Opera Season
    All performances are in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center unless otherwise described. Single Tickets range from $19 to $275 and will be available July 15. Full and Flex Subscriptions are on sale now starting at $75. Family performance tickets are just $5. For more information or to make your purchase, contact The Dallas Opera Ticket Services Office at 214.443.1000 or visit us online, 24/7, at www.dallasopera.org.

    THE DALLAS OPERA 2015-2016 FALL SEASON INFORMATION
    The Dallas Opera celebrates its Fifty-Ninth International Season in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in the Dallas Arts District. Evening performances will begin at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday matinees begin at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise stated. English translations will be projected above the stage at every performance and assistance is available for the hearing impaired. The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talk will begin one hour prior to curtain, at most performances excluding FIRST NIGHT of the season.

    GREAT SCOTT by Jake Heggie
    October 30, November 1(m), 4, 7 & 15(m), 2015
    A Thrilling Dallas Opera World Premiere!
    Libretto by Terrence McNally*
    Time: Present Day
    Place: A Major American City
    Conductor: Patrick Summers
    Stage Director: Jack O’Brien*
    Set and Costume Design: Bob Crowley
    Lighting Design: Brian MacDevitt*
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Starring: Joyce DiDonato* (Arden Scott), Ailyn Pérez (Tatyana Bakst), Frederica von Stade (Mrs. Edward “Winnie” Flato), Nathan Gunn (Sid Taylor), Anthony Roth Costanzo* (Roane Heckle), Kevin Burdette (Eric Gold), Michael Mayes* (Wendell Swan).
    A Brand-New Dallas Opera Production!

    TOSCA by Giacomo Puccini
    November 6, 8(m), 11, 14, 20 & 22(m), 2015
    A passionate and timeless masterpiece in a beloved period production
    An opera in three acts first performed in Rome, Italy on January 14, 1900
    Text by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa after Victorien Sardou’s 1887 French-language play, La Tosca
    Time: Early 19th century
    Place: Locations in and around the City of Rome
    Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume
    Stage Director: Ellen Douglas Schlaefer*
    Set and Costume Design: Ulisse Santicchi
    Lighting Design: Marie Barrett
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Children’s Chorus Master: TBA
    Starring: Emily Magee (Floria Tosca), Giancarlo Monsalve* (Mario Cavaradossi), Raymond Aceto (Baron Scarpia), William Ferguson (Spoletta), Dale Travis* (A Sacristan) and Ryan Kuster (Angelotti).
    One of The Dallas Opera’s Most Popular!

    BECOMING SANTA CLAUS by Mark Adamo
    December 4, 6(m), 9 & 12, 2015
    An Eagerly Awaited Dallas Opera World Premiere!
    Libretto by the composer, Mark Adamo.
    Time: Now
    Place: An Elven kingdom in the far, far north; also, the stable of the first Christmas
    Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume
    Stage Director: Paul Curran
    Set and Costume Design: Gary McCann*
    Video Design: Driscoll Otto*
    Lighting Design: Paul Hackenmueller*
    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman
    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom
    Starring: Jennifer Rivera* (Queen Sophine), Juan José de León (Prince Claus), Matt Boehler* (Donkey)
    Another New Dallas Opera Production

    * Dallas Opera Debut
    ** American Debut
    ______________________________________________________________________________
    The Dallas Opera is supported, in part, by funds from: Texas Instruments Foundation, TACA, City of Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs; the Texas Commission on the Arts and The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA). American Airlines is the official airline of The Dallas Opera. Lexus is the official vehicle of The Dallas Opera. Advertising support from The Dallas Morning News. A special thanks to the Elsa von Seggern Foundation for its continuing support.

    ###

    Six Women Selected for Institute for Women Conductors!

    103 Applicants for Elite Program; Institute Makes Room for Four Additional Women Conductors to Observe

    An International Inaugural Session of The Institute for Women Conductors At The Dallas Opera

    Nov. 28 – Dec. 6, 2015

    ~~~~

    Launched with Generous Support from the Richard and Enika Schulze Foundation

    DALLAS, JUNE 5, 2015 – The Dallas Opera is proud to announce the names of the six distinguished professionals selected to participate in the inaugural session of the Institute for Women Conductors at The Dallas Opera:

    • Jennifer Condon (Australia/Germany)
    • Jessica Gethin (Australia)
    • Natalie Murray Beale (UK)
    • Stephanie Rhodes (USA)
    • Anna Skryleva (Russia/Germany)
    • Lidiya Yankovskaya (USA)

    Working to address a long-standing career issue in the opera world, The Dallas Opera is launching a unique, new residential program designed to provide training and career support for distinctively talented women conductors.  Female conductors age forty and younger, as well as accomplished women singers, opera coaches and accompanists, and instrumentalists with established careers seeking a new career at the podium, were encouraged to apply. 

    A total of 103 women conductors and professional musicians heeded the call and applied by the April 15th deadline.  Of that number, nearly half the applicants (44%) came from the United States.  Other nations making a strong showing included Germany, Italy, Israel and Taiwan (followed by Greece, Canada, Australia and Spain).

    Applicants from 27 countries included principal and assistant conductors, concertmasters and music staff from top-ranked symphonies, opera companies, and conservatories.

    “As a female conductor,” explained IWC Fellow Anna Skryleva, “I’m interested, of course, in programs supporting women—there are still so few of them; I don’t know of any other program of this type in the opera field.  These days in Dallas promise to be very intensive.”

    Jennifer Condon heartily agreed, writing: “The Dallas Opera’s recognition of the need for encouragement and support of women conductors is fabulous. The programme – so generously offered – touches on all aspects relevant to a career in conducting. So far as I am aware, there is no programme of its kind anywhere else in the world.

    “I simply leapt at the chance to be included.”

    “I was so thrilled to see The Dallas Opera offer such an innovative initiative for female conductors to further develop their opera skills on the podium,” responded Jessica Gethin.  “As a young, female, Australian conductor based in Perth, the opportunity to be a part of the inaugural Institute for Women Conductors is invaluable at this stage of my conducting career. 

    “Through a generous combination of intense masterclasses on the podium with international mentors, seminars on the challenges we face within the industry and networking opportunities provided, I am looking forward to developing my technical skills and broadening my repertoire knowledge in a uniquely supportive environment and earning my place as an alumna in this brilliant and vital program, watching it grow and nurture the careers of many female conductors from around the world. 

    “I can’t wait to get my hands on the scores,” added Ms. Gethin, “and head over to the other side of the globe to get started!” 

    This new institute will be inaugurated on November 28, 2015 and run through December 6, 2015, with key support from the Richard and Enika Schulze Foundation.

    The IWC will consist of master classes and one-on-ones with Dallas Opera Music Director Emmanuel Villaume and Principal Guest Conductor Nicole Paiement; seminars, discussions, and networking opportunities; as well as the chance to conduct The Dallas Opera Orchestra in a public concert performance the evening of December 5, 2015 onstage in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in Dallas, Texas.

    When asked what she hoped to gain from the experience, Stephanie Rhodes replied: “Everything!  The insights of both Emmanuel Villaume and Nicole Paiement into conducting technique, interpretation, and the various business aspects of the profession are something I imagine will be invaluable, given the wealth of experience they bring to the table.

    “I’m particularly looking forward to building relationships with fellow female conductors,” Ms. Rhodes added, “as I think the support, strength, and perspective we can offer each other now will be critical throughout our careers.”

    IWC Fellow Natalie Murray Beale expressed similar sentiments: “This program is a vital acknowledgement of female conducting talent and a rare opportunity for women conductors.

    “I have great hopes to develop my conducting at the Institute for Women Conductors at The Dallas Opera and to make new, positive working relationships with artists and managers alike.  I look forward,” she added, “to emerging a stronger and more visible conductor.”

    In addition to the six Institute participants, four more conductors – all from the United States – have been invited to observe the proceedings.  They are: Arianne Abela, Luçik Aprahämian, Avlana Eisenberg and Co Boi Nguyen.

    Those attending will also be encouraged to take part in an annual two-day networking event, beginning in the summer of 2016. 

    Stated Dallas Opera General Director and CEO Keith Cerny: “The Dallas Opera has demonstrated, in multiple ways, its commitment to reshaping the opera field through the use of innovative public outreach, by exploring new technologies, commissioning new works to expand the operatic repertoire, and programming with passion and imagination.”

    “This much-needed program,” Mr. Cerny added, “will enable more women conductors to add their talents and insights to our collective understanding of this art form, while encouraging conversation about the necessity of women in leadership roles.”

    The Dallas Opera’s Principal Guest Conductor, Nicole Paiement, who also serves as the Artistic Director and Conductor for San Francisco’s renowned contemporary opera company, Opera Parallèle, commented, “In tandem with my work as a professional conductor, I have spent many years striving to develop and support exceptional young talent, both onstage and in the orchestra pit.  I am tremendously pleased to be able to continue this aspect of my career in a leadership role here in Dallas, and to be responsible for guiding each carefully selected group through this newly developed Dallas Opera program.

    “The women taking part in this program will have the all-too-rare opportunity to observe another woman in this leadership role, “ Paiement added, “something that, regrettably, I never experienced in my early career as I sought role models from among my professional peers.  I sincerely hope my work with the women in this institute can serve as a source of both valuable insights and inspiration.”

     

    Marc A. Scorca, President and CEO of OPERA America, remarked: “The Dallas Opera continues to expand its influence and stature among American opera companies, as shown by this exciting new initiative.  The company is to be applauded for taking a significant step to remedy the existing gender imbalance on the podium.  This effort complements OPERA America’s support of the work of female opera composers and promises to enrich the art form by encouraging more gifted artists to express themselves through opera.”

    Lidiya Yankovskaya, another IWC Fellow, wrote: “The Dallas Opera is known for doing innovative and exciting work that has placed the company at the forefront of American Opera and continues to inspire many within the field, myself included.  I relish the opportunity to see this work from the inside and to learn from the company’s phenomenal leadership.  

     “Taking part in Dallas Opera’s program for Women Conductors will be crucial in giving me the push I need to gain exposure and move forward into more regular high-level work in the opera world.  The institute will not only provide the opportunity to receive experience working with the company’s fantastic artists and feedback on my work, but it also represents a chance to gain exposure, and to discover how to make the leap into the next career level.”

    Internationally renowned Dallas Opera Music Director Emmanuel Villaume observed: “No conductor ever stands at the podium alone.  We raise our baton with those who came before us, and those who will follow in our footsteps.

    “It takes a lifetime to become completely at home on the podium,” Villaume adds.  “It was my privilege to be guided and taught by geniuses like Spiros Argiris and Seiji Ozawa, who, in turn, always quoted their own masters.  In fact, they claimed that, only near the end of their performing careers, did they entirely understand some of the comments and advice they received from their mentors.

    “We are always trying to perfect our work.  I feel I am now at a place in my career, where I can begin to effectively share my experiences with the next generation of conductors.”

     ~~~~

    2015 IWC FELLOWS:

    JENNIFER CONDON (Australia/Germany)

    Jennifer Condon has been passionate about opera from an absurdly young age – since her teens she has been fortunate to have fellow Australian, Simone Young, as mentor.  Jennifer studied piano in Sydney, and conducting in Melbourne and Vienna before commencing work as a souffleuse at the Hamburg State Opera in 2008.  She now has a repertoire of over 55 operas.  During her time in Hamburg, Jennifer also brought Peggy Glanville-Hicks’ opera Sappho (1963) from the composer’s hand-written manuscript to the recording studio.  The CD, with an eminent cast including Deborah Polaski, Sir John Tomlinson and Wolfgang Koch with the Gulbenkian Orchestra, has been released to considerable critical acclaim.  Jennifer lives in Berlin and works as a free-lance vocal coach and prompt as she pursues a conducting career.  Assistant conducting engagements to date include Lohengrin in Zurich and Salome in Vienna.  Future engagements include Reimann’s Lear in Budapest and Ariadne auf Naxos in Tokyo.

    JESSICA GETHIN (Australia)

    Australian-born conductor Jessica Gethin has won praise from audiences and critics alike for her dynamic energy, outstanding musicianship and abounding presence on the podium.  A graduate of the exclusive Symphony Australia Conductor Development Program, Ms. Gethin commenced her official appointment as Chief Conductor of the Perth Symphony Orchestra (Perth, Australia) in 2011.  Jessica Gethin has performed on stages throughout Europe, USA, UK, Canada, Asia and Australia as conductor, concert presenter, program writer, orchestrator, guest lecturer, music educator and adjudicator.  With a diverse background working across a variety of genres ranging from classical, jazz, opera and ballet to musical theatre, contemporary and film score; Jessica has recorded for numerous CDs, television documentaries, live radio broadcasts and television commercials.  Artist collaborations include conducting Welsh bass baritone Bryn Terfel, Divinyl’s Chrissy Amphlette, The Ten Tenors, soprano Rachelle Durkin, Australian screen star Lisa McCune, soprano Marina Prior, tenor David Hobson, jazz trumpeter James Morrison and Dutch violinist Rudolf Koelman, to name a few.  Ms. Gethin currently resides in Western Australia with her husband and two children.

    NATALIE MURRAY BEALE (UK)

    Conductor Natalie Murray Beale is a BBC Performing Arts Fund Fellow and is being mentored by Esa-Pekka Salonen. She has performed with the Welsh National Opera, Opera Holland Park, Spitalfields Festival, Chamber Orchestra of London and the City of London Sinfonia.  Ms. Murray Beale has also gained valuable experience as Assistant Conductor for the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, Festival d’Aix, Wiener Festwochen and Den Nye Opera with the Philharmonia, Bergen Philharmonic, B’Rock Orchestra, Le Cercle de l’Harmonie and the Freiburger Barockorchester.  Previous positions include serving on the music staff of Welsh National Opera; as coach at the Royal Opera House, Young Artist Programme; and as Guest Chorus Director of London Symphony Chorus. 

    Ms. Murray Beale enjoys collaborating with composers and recently conducted the soundtracks to the video game Alien:Isolation (BAFTA nominated) and the British film Robot Overlords. Her performances of the new opera, We are Shadows, received a Royal Philharmonic Society award.  This year she will make her debuts with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic and Malta Philharmonic Orchestra.

    STEPHANIE RHODES (USA)

    Stephanie Rhodes is a renowned opera collaborator, having served on the music staff of the Bolshoi Theatre of Russia, The Dallas Opera, Houston Grand Opera, LA Opera, San Francisco Opera, Washington National Opera and Wolf Trap Opera, amongst others. She has garnered experience as a conductor, assistant conductor, prompter, chorus master, rehearsal pianist, orchestral keyboardist and diction coach.  This summer she joins the Miami Summer Music Festival as the Studio Program Director and conductor of Purcell’s Dido and Aeneas, additionally participating as a fellow in the festival’s Orchestral Conducting Institute. As a Fulbright award recipient, Ms. Rhodes spent the 2012/13 season in Moscow specializing in Russian repertoire and pronunciation for non-native singers. She was recently commissioned by The Dallas Opera to transliterate Tchaikovsky’s Iolanta and is currently working on a book to standardize Russian diction for singers. An alum of the Houston Grand Opera Studio and San Francisco’s Merola Opera program, she holds degrees from the University of Michigan and Utah State University in Collaborative Piano and Piano Performance.

    ANNA SKRYLEVA (Russia/Germany)

    Russian conductor Anna Skryleva has lived and worked in Germany for the past 15 years.  Currently, Ms. Skryleva is engaged as principal resident conductor at The State Theatre, Darmstadt, in addition to performing as a concert pianist and a chamber musician in Russia, other European nations and Mexico.  Anna Skryleva’s career as a conductor began in 2002 in Karlsruhe, where she was engaged at the Music College as music assistant of the conductor Prof. Alicja Mounk.  From 2007 to 2012, Anna Skryleva was engaged at the State Opera Hamburg as musical assistant of Simone Young, where she acquired a wide repertoire, from German Romanticism to Italian bel canto to modern music of the 20th century.  After successfully conducting Richard Strauss’ Salome at the State Theatre Darmstadt in 2013, Anna Skryleva was named Darmstadt’s Principal Resident Conductor.  Since then, she has conducted new productions and revivals of works including Otello, Tristan und Isolde, Il trittico, Madame Butterfly, La traviata and many more.  The German publication Main-Echo named Anna Skryleva “Person of the Year 2013.”  Earlier this year, she was nominated for the “Emotion Award 2015” in the Category “Women in Leadership”; winners will be announced later this month.

    LIDIYA YANKOVSKAYA (USA)

    Lidiya Yankovskaya’s recent work as a symphonic and opera conductor has been hailed as “superb,” “expert,” and “coax[ing] every possible expressive note from the instrumentalists.”  Currently, Ms. Yankovskaya serves as Music Director of Harvard University’s Lowell House Opera, Artistic Director of Juventas New Music Ensemble, and Music Director with Commonwealth Lyric Theater.  She also works regularly with Gotham Chamber Opera, Center for Contemporary Opera, and New York Lyric Opera.  Last summer, Ms. Yankovskaya served as a conducting fellow under renowned conductor Lorin Maazel at the Castleton Festival, where she had the privilege of assisting Maestro Maazel and filled in for him regularly in rehearsal and performance.  Recent productions have received multiple awards ranging from The American Prize to the National Opera Association Award.  In addition to her work as a conductor, Lidiya is a pianist and coach, recently serving as Music Director for Opera Boston’s education tours.  Presently, she is working as a Russian Diction Coach and occasional rehearsal conductor for Tanglewood Festival Chorus (the chorus of the Boston Symphony). www.LidiyaYankovskaya.com

    ~~~~

    2015 IWC OBSERVERS:

    ARIANNE ABELA (USA)

    Known for her work promoting charitable organizations, conductor Arianne Abela has appeared on NBC’s Today Show and America’s Got Talent as artistic director of “3 Penny,” a non-profit chorus and orchestra, and co-founder of “House of Clouds.”  Arianne served as music director of Saybrook College Orchestra and has conducted the Yale Symphony Orchestra, Wesleyan University Orchestra and the Vidin State Philharmonic Orchestra in Bulgaria.  As a chorusmaster, Abela has prepared choirs for Michael Tilson Thomas, Leonard Slatkin, Rafael Payare, and Martin Katz, as well as for the University of Michigan Opera in productions of Mozart’s The Magic Flute and Rossini’s The Barber of Seville.  As a soloist and professional ensemble singer, Abela has performed with major ensembles across North America, Europe and Asia.  Abela is currently a doctoral candidate in conducting at the University of Michigan under the tutelage of Jerry Blackstone. She holds a master’s degree in conducting from Yale University and a bachelor’s degree from Smith College.

    LUÇIK APRAHÄMIAN (USA)

    Luçik Aprahämian’s versatility as a conductor makes her equally at home in front of an orchestra, leading a vocal ensemble, or guiding outstanding performances on the opera stage.  With her profound passion for opera, Dr. Aprahämian has served as co-artistic director of Southern Arizona Opera, worked with Opera Parallèle and Bayshore Lyric Opera (both located in the Bay area), and served as assistant conductor and director of the Opera Theatre Program at the University of California at Santa Cruz.  She is an avid exponent of new music and has commissioned and premiered works for choir, orchestra, and opera with ensembles in the Bay Area and Arizona.  Recent premieres include Andrew Pascoe’s opera, God: The Opera and David Evan Jones’s chamber opera, The Rehearsal.   Dr. Aprahämian received her bachelor’s degree in fortepiano performance practice, as well as a master’s degree in conducting, from the University of California at Santa Cruz.  She pursued additional graduate studies to earn her doctorate in conducting from the University of Arizona. 

    AVLANA EISENBERG (USA)

    Music Director of the Boston Chamber Symphony, Avlana Eisenberg has conducted orchestras throughout the United States and in France, Germany, Austria, Scotland, Spain, Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, and Hungary. Her debut CD, with soloist Zina Schiff and the Budapest Symphony Orchestra MAV, features violin concertos by Sibelius and Barber and the world premiere orchestral recording of Ben-Haim’s Three Songs without Words.  Eisenberg received a Fulbright Fellowship for conducting study in Paris and apprenticeship at the Paris National Opera and was one of Glamour magazine’s “Top Ten College Women of the Year.”  As an undergraduate at Yale University, she founded and directed the Silliman Symphony and was honored with Yale’s “V. Browne Irish Award for Excellence in the Performing Arts.”  An alumna of Interlochen Arts Camp and the Aspen Music Festival, Eisenberg holds a Master’s Degree from the University of Michigan and a Graduate Performance Diploma from the Peabody Institute.

    CO BOI NGUYEN (USA)

    Ms. Co Boi Nguyen has been on the faculty of the University of Redlands, School of Music since 2006, serving as music director of the University of Redlands Orchestra and Opera.  From 2005 to 2007, Ms. Nguyen was conductor and faculty member of the C.W. Post Chamber Music Festival at Long Island University, New York.  At the same time, she also worked as assistant conductor to Oscar-winning composer Tan Dun in New York.  As an alumna of the Vietnam National Academy of Music, Ms. Nguyen returns to Hanoi regularly to perform and to give master classes.  She made her highly acclaimed debut with the Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra at the Hanoi Opera House in July 2002, making her the first woman ever to lead the ensemble.  Ms. Nguyen is a graduate of the conducting programs at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia and the Juilliard School in New York.

     ~~~

    EVENTS, GUESTS AND ARTISTS ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE

     

    VISIT WWW.DALLASOPERA.ORG FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

     

    For high-resolution, digital photographs suitable for print or to arrange an interview

    Please contact Suzanne Calvin, Director of Media and Public Relations

    214.443.1014 or suzanne.calvin@dallasopera.org

     

    TEXAS INSTRUMENTS, 2015-2016 SEASON SPONSOR FOR THE DALLAS OPERA’S “SEEKING THE HUMAN ELEMENT” SEASON

     

    Ticket Information for the 2015-2016 Dallas Opera Season

    All performances are in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center unless otherwise described.  Single Tickets range from $19 to $275 and will be available July 15.  Full and Flex Subscriptions are on sale now starting at $75.  Family performance tickets (available June 1) are just $5. 

    For more information or to make your purchase, contact The Dallas Opera Ticket Services Office at 214.443.1000 or visit us online, 24/7, at www.dallasopera.org.

     

    THE DALLAS OPERA 2015-2016 FALL SEASON INFORMATION

    The Dallas Opera celebrates its Fifty-Ninth International Season in the Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House at the AT&T Performing Arts Center in the Dallas Arts District. Evening performances will begin at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday matinees begin at 2:00 p.m. unless otherwise stated.  English translations will be projected above the stage at every performance and assistance is available for the hearing impaired.  The Joy and Ronald Mankoff Pre-Opera Talk will begin one hour prior to curtain, at most performances excluding FIRST NIGHT of the season.

     

    GREAT SCOTT by Jake Heggie

    October 30, November 1(m), 4, 7 & 15(m), 2015

    A Thrilling Dallas Opera World Premiere!

    Libretto by Terrence McNally*

    Time: Present Day

    Place: A Major American City

    Conductor: Patrick Summers

    Stage Director: Jack O’Brien*

    Production Design: Bob Crowley

    Lighting Design: Brian MacDevitt*

    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman

    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom

    Starring: Joyce DiDonato* (Arden Scott), Ailyn Pérez (Tatyana Bakst), Frederica von Stade (Mrs. Edward “Winnie” Flato), Nathan Gunn (Sid Taylor), Anthony Roth Costanzo* (Roane Heckle), Kevin Burdette (Eric Gold) and Michael Mayes* (Wendell Swan).  A Brand-New Dallas Opera Production!

     

    TOSCA by Giacomo Puccini

    November 6, 8(m), 11, 14, 20 & 22(m), 2015

    A passionate and timeless masterpiece in a beloved period production

    An opera in three acts first performed in Rome, Italy on January 14, 1900

    Text by Luigi Illica and Giuseppe Giacosa after Victorien Sardou’s 1887 French-language play, La Tosca

    Time: Early 19th century

    Place: Locations in and around the City of Rome

    Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume

    Stage Director: Ellen Douglas Schlaefer*

    Production Design: Ulisse Santicchi

    Lighting Design: Marie Barrett

    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman

    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom

    Children’s Chorus Master: TBA

    Starring: Emily Magee (Floria Tosca), Giancarlo Monsalve* (Mario Cavaradossi), Raymond Aceto (Baron Scarpia), William Ferguson (Spoletta), Dale Travis* (A Sacristan) and Ryan Kuster (Angelotti).

    One of The Dallas Opera’s Most Popular!

     

    BECOMING SANTA CLAUS by Mark Adamo

    December 4, 6(m), 9 & 12, 2015

    An Eagerly Awaited Dallas Opera World Premiere!

    Libretto by the composer, Mark Adamo.

    Time: Now

    Place: An Elven kingdom in the far, far north; also, the stable of the first Christmas

    Conductor: Emmanuel Villaume

    Stage Director: Paul Curran

    Production Design: Gary McCann*

    Video Design: Driscoll Otto*

    Lighting Design: Paul Hackenmueller*

    Wig & make-up Design: David Zimmerman

    Chorus Master: Alexander Rom

    Starring: Jennifer Rivera* (Queen Sophine), Juan José de León (Prince Claus), Matt Boehler* (Donkey) Another New Dallas Opera Production

     

    * Dallas Opera Debut

    ** American Debut

    ________________________________________________________________________The Dallas Opera is supported, in part, by funds from:  Texas Instruments Foundation, TACA, City of Dallas, Office of Cultural Affairs; the Texas Commission on the Arts and The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).  American Airlines is the official airline of The Dallas Opera.  Lexus is the official vehicle of The Dallas Opera.  Advertising support from The Dallas Morning News.  A special thanks to the Elsa von Seggern Foundation for its continuing support.

     

    ###

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    The Dallas Opera

    • Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House
    • 2403 Flora Street, Suite 500
    • Dallas, TX 75201
    • 214.443.1000
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